The aluminum heads can adhere to the sparkplug threads, and of course, the steel threads are stronger. Take a good look at the plug and see if there was any aluminum stuck on it. Heck, I guess it doesn't matter...you probably need to tap/clean it out anyway. Use Never-sieze or similar product and never install a plug tighter than it should be (not that YOU did). This is why they put those crush washer on plugs: to make a good seal without the need of excessive torque. I hope you don't have aluminum thread stuck in a valve seat. You may want to check compression prior to rethreading the hole, if the spark plug is in there now.
Originally posted by brock
but when i took the old plug out, it was all the way down. in fact, the bike ran fine till i changed it. now it wont go in barely at all, and of course with it hanging 1/4th of the way out, it's running like pure crap.
i guess what you're saying is probably that if the bad plug was all the way in, then its probably damaged all the way down, including the top.
but when i took the old plug out, it was all the way down. in fact, the bike ran fine till i changed it. now it wont go in barely at all, and of course with it hanging 1/4th of the way out, it's running like pure crap.
i guess what you're saying is probably that if the bad plug was all the way in, then its probably damaged all the way down, including the top.
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